Saturday, September 8, 2012

Egg Nonsense





We have been treated to the anti egg argument now for decades. All the science churned out says at best is that our modern diet generates a poor cholesterol profile. To say more than than is seriously problematic and not even helpful.

Without question, eggs are in our diet. They are also in every pastry we eat along with an excessive dose of sugar.

There is also ample reason to think that a diet exclusively using eggs for protein is surprisingly beneficial, provided you toss any processed carbohydrates.

Besides which our understanding of cholesterol biology is incomplete and seriously conflicted.

So let me provide some information that works. Minimize the intake of animal fat generally. However, I suspect a hierarchy of choice in which beef is worst and eggs and chicken are much better and fish is best. The key point is a small portion of animal fat in a meal to minimize the direct effect on artery inflammation. An egg or four ounces is small. Add vegetable protein to fill out the meal.

Study that sought to disparage health of eggs was authored by scientists with financial ties to Big Pharma

Tuesday, September 04, 2012 by: J. D. Heyes


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Do you remember recent reports about a supposedly unbiased scientific study that concluded that eggs, in actuality, are not good for you?


If your so-called "BS meter" suddenly pegged, you had good reason to be skeptical. Turns out the scientists who conducted the study have ties to Big Pharma.


First, a little recap.


Writing in the journal Atherosclerosis, researchers lumped the consumption of egg yolks with smoking, saying in essence that one was just as bad as the other in clogging your arteries.


Dr. J. David Spence, a professor of neurology at Western University in Canada, wrote that he and his team found a relationship between the consumption of egg yolks and the development of atherosclerosis, a condition in which arteries become clogged, causing a range of health problems, the most prominent of which are heart attack and stroke. In atherosclerosis, plaque accumulates over time along the walls of arteries, narrowing them.


The team surveyed 1,231 middle-aged male and female patients who had been referred to a vascular clinic at the London Health Sciences Center's University Hospital after they had suffered a "mini-stroke" or a regular stroke.


Spence's team examined the patients' carotid wall thickness then compared it with answers about egg yolk consumption, exercise habits, smoking and other lifestyle factors. In the end, Spence and his team concluded that the top 20 percent of egg consumers had narrowing of the carotid artery that was two-thirds that of smokers.


Bogus methodology?


Spence admitted that it did not have data to look at overall dietary patterns, and that, say other experts, is part of the problem.


Spence's entire research seems to be predicated on a single questionnaire in which the patients examined were asked about "their lifestyle and medications, including pack-years of smoking, and the number of egg yolks consumed per week times the number of years consumed (egg-yolk years)."


Further, according to paleolithic health guru Mark Sisson, study methodology that is dependent upon the subject's memory, honesty and accuracy is, by definition, unreliable.


"Moreover, since it's a single data point, no causality can be ascribed," adds a critique of the study by the Alliance for Natural Health.


"This study does not address other dietary factors known to influence cardiovascular risk, such as saturated and trans fat, or dietary fiber," Dr. David J. Gordon, a special assistant for clinical studies at the Division of Cardiovascular Sciences at the National Heart Blood and Lung Institute, told Huffington Post.


Funded by Big Pharma


Furthermore, the study's authors admitted to conflicts of interest when performing a similar study two years ago, the ANH pointed out. In a special "Conflicts of Interest" section posted at the end of the study, which was published in The Canadian Journal of Cardiology, while Spence and his team "receives funding from the purveyors of margarine or eggs," Spence, along with fellow team member Dr. Jean Davignon, "have received honoraria and speaker's fees from several pharmaceutical companies manufacturing lipid-lowering drugs." In addition, Davignon "has received support from Pfizer Canada for an annual atherosclerosis symposium; his research has been funded in part by Pfizer Canada, AstraZeneca Canada Inc and Merck Frosst Canada Ltd.," the disclosure said.


The ANH said it smells a rat.


"See how this works? Big Pharma has a vested interest in selling drugs to lower cholesterol," the group said in its critique. "Big Pharma funds research that says our favorite breakfast food causes high cholesterol (which is not true). The idea is to give people...a false choice: change a lifelong dietary habit, or pop a pill. Big Pharma thinks they know which choice most people will make."


Full disclosure: A number of physicians and the Mayo Clinic believe egg yolks can be harmful, if eaten in excess. And at least one study - detailed here - found that eggs are lower in cholesterol (while higher in vitamin D) than originally thought.


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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Lolol ~ yes, you're absolutely right. The cautions/arguments against the consumption of eggs is MADE UP. While at the same time we need to be aware of the way we treat our animals and livestock. All creatures existing on farms need to be treated gently, with love. Eggs properly cooked up are nutritious, and delicious. Kudos to you. πŸŒ»πŸŽΆπŸ˜ƒπŸŒΉπŸΎ